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Chest, Vol 93, 1013-1019, Copyright © 1988 by American College of Chest Physicians
ARTICLES |
PM Dorinsky, JL Costello and JE Gadek
Department of Medicine, Ohio State University, Columbus.
Previous studies have suggested that oxygen uptake (VO2) may be dependent on oxygen delivery (QO2) at most levels of QO2 in patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS); however, the adequacy of substrate delivery in patients with non-ARDS respiratory failure is unclear. The purpose of the present study was to examine the relationship between VO2 and QO2 in a group of critically ill patients (n = 10) with non-ARDS respiratory failure (ie, cardiac pulmonary edema, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [COPD], or pneumonia). For comparison, these relationships were also examined in a group of patients (n = 6) with ARDS. The data indicate that VO2 is dependent on QO2 in both patients with ARDS and non-ARDS respiratory failure. In contrast, regional venous oxygen tension differences varied considerably between the two groups of patients, indicating differences in local adaptations to critical reductions in QO2. Finally, over a similar range of QO2, oxygen extraction was greater in patients with ARDS compared to patients with non-ARDS respiratory failure (r = -0.67 and slope = -0.62 vs r = -0.45 and slope = -0.35; p less than 0.05). These data suggest that a linear relationship between VO2 and QO2 is not unique to patients with ARDS and may not predict regional adaptations to critical reductions in substrate availability.
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